Aaron
Thursday 12th October 2006 7:45pm
Royal Berkshire
69,937 posts
Quote: Nick @ October 12, 2006, 11:24 AM
You don't think that the extras played a part in the Red Dwarf sales? If that were the case then why would the company spend money making documentaries, recording commentaries etc. I think that you're letting personal preference dictate your views here Aaron. Anyway, it's not exactly a new show.
If extras didn't play a pretty big part in DVD sales then special edition DVDs would never be released.
You misunderstand my point. I'm not saying that extras play NO part, but I am disputing your direct link between having extras and having huge sales figures.
Quote: Nick @ October 12, 2006, 11:24 AM
By the way, it is almost always possible to include something extra on DVDs. For example, The Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads DVDs were released quite recently and had no extras at all. Now surely if the company had spent just a little money then they could have recorded commentaries with Rodney Bewes, Sheila Fearn, Brigit Forsyth etc. There are also plenty of archive docs in existence if they could have gotten the rights.
That's true, but for shows like that I think (or at least I think that they would be of this opinion) that the demand is different... With newer programmes (and by newer I mean past 10-15 years) it is more a case of people having watched and wanting to have the ability to watch again at any point, and so extras are produced to give the incentive to buy rather than record on one's own DVD-R, VHS or similar. With older programmes, and I'm thinking WHTTLL, Steptoe, Hancock, that kind of thing, the need and demand is different. People wouldn't have been able to record the episodes for themselves in the same way, and are more likely wanting to look back to those classic programmes of their youth which they only have a partial memory of, rather than just add to an archive or such.
Well I think that makes sense. Basically, the demand is different. Older shows can go on the strength of their reputation and not having been seen for decades. Newer ones can't.